Preston v. Herminghaus

292 P. 953, 211 Cal. 1, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 296
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1930
DocketDocket No. S.F. 13354.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 292 P. 953 (Preston v. Herminghaus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Preston v. Herminghaus, 292 P. 953, 211 Cal. 1, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 296 (Cal. 1930).

Opinion

THE COURT.

This action was brought for the purpose of collecting attorneys’ fees alleged to be due plaintiffs from the defendants for legal services rendered by plaintiffs as attorneys at law in protecting defendants’ water rights. It appears that defendants, in the year 1924, were the owners of a tract of land containing about 18,000 acres in Fresno and Madera Counties and adjacent to the San Joaquin River, all but 1,000 acres being riparian thereto. These valuable water rights were in danger by reason of threatened and actual diversions and appropriations by the Southern California Edison Company, the San Joaquin Water Storage District, the Madera Irrigation District, the San Joaquin Light and Power Corporation, Miller & Lux, Inc., and by other corporations and individuals. The defendants found it advisable to retain attorneys in order to properly protect themselves against these threatened and actual invasions of their rights, and in 1924 they retained plaintiffs for that purpose and for the purpose of recovering damages for any unlawful interference with their interests. The terms of this original contract of employment are not important on this appeal, for reasons that will presently appear. The plaintiffs, as attorneys for the defendants, started proceedings against the chief diverter and appropriator, the Southern California Edison Company, to enjoin that company from diverting and appropriating any water to the injury of defendants’ riparian rights. This action will hereafter be referred to as the injunction suit. After a long and arduous trial the plaintiffs secured an injunction in defendants’ favor. From this judgment the Southern California Edison Company appealed to this iourt. While the appeal was pending, the plaintiffs and *4 defendants herein entered into a written contract on October 8, 1925, purporting to fix the fee of plaintiffs for the legal services rendered and to be rendered in protecting defendants’ riparian rights. It is the interpretation of this contract that is involved in this action.

Under the terms of this contract the plaintiffs defended the judgment on appeal in the injunction suit and secured in this court an affirmance of the judgment of the trial court. (Herminghaus v. Southern California Edison Co., 200 Cal. 81 [252 Pac. 607].) The Edison Company then appealed to the United States Supreme Court, but the plaintiffs succeeded in securing a dismissal of the appeal on the ground of lack of jurisdiction.

Immediately after the affirmance by this court of the judgment in the injunction suit on December 24, 1926, the Southern California Edison Company filed two actions, one in Madera County and one in Fresno County, for the purpose of condemning a portion of defendants’ water rights. These actions will hereafter be referred to as the condemnation suits. The first of these actions was set for trial in October, 1927. Under the terms of their contract of employment, plaintiffs took the necessary steps for the proper defense of these actions, and handled all matters incident thereto until the same were dismissed under circumstances to be discussed later. In the meantime, and during and after the pendency of the appeal in the injunction suit, the Southern California Edison Company, by an arrangement with the defendants consummated by plaintiffs as attorneys, made payments to the defendants herein of sums of money totaling $260,000, the consideration for which was the temporary waiver by defendants of their right to complain of the use of the water by the Southern California Edison Company, contrary to the provisions of the injunction. From this $260,000 defendants paid plaintiffs the sum of $35,000 on account of attorneys’ fees, upon which point there is no dispute on this appeal.

As previously stated, the first of the condemnation suits was set for trial in October, 1927. On or about October 17th, P. H. Bottoms, the official representative and agent of the Herminghaus people, without the attendance of any of their counsel, and without consulting said counsel as to his purpose, sold to the Southern California Edison Company the *5 entire holdings of the Herminghaus people on the San Joaquin River. During the conference with the representatives of the Edison Company, Bottoms made no attempt to consult with plaintiffs, and in no way informed them of the proposed sale until after it was consummated. By the terms ..of this sale defendants received the sum of $873,200 in cash for the property on the basis of $50 an acre for the acreage involved. If this sum be added to the sum already received, the total is $1,133,200. As a part of this deal the defendants gave a full release to the Southern California Edison Company, and conveyed the property to its subsidiary, the Edison Securities Company, and then instructed plaintiffs to participate in the dismissal of the condemnation suits. It should here be noted that it is agreed between the parties to this appeal that, in consummating the above deal with the Southern California Edison Company, neither the defendants nor the Edison people made any attempt to allocate any part of the purchase price to water or water rights alone, the entire sum having been paid for the land and water rights together, or, more correctly, for the riparian land. The sale of the entire property, of course, terminated plaintiffs’ employment, there no longer being any water rights of the defendants to protect. Furthermore, it is conceded by defendants that this termination of the contract of employment amounted to complete performance on the part of plaintiffs.

The contract of employment herein involved was, as before stated, entered into on October 8, 1925, after the employment of plaintiffs had begun and while the relationship of attorney and client existed. The final draft of the contract was prepared by plaintiffs, and there can be but little doubt that both parties thereto were attempting to provide, and intended to provide, for all contingencies that might thereafter arise. The contract first provides that the water rights of the defendants are in danger by diversions and appropriations, both threatened and actual, by certain enumerated corporations and individuals, and that it has therefore become necessary for defendants to employ attorneys to represent them in protecting and preserving their water rights; that the plaintiffs have already instituted and successfully prosecuted the injunction suit in the trial court, which case is now on appeal, and then continues as follows:

*6 “Now, therefore, it is agreed as follows:
“(1) That the parties of the first part [defendants herein] do hereby retain and employ the parties of the second part [plaintiffs herein] as their attorneys in the matter aforesaid for the period of five years from the date hereof unless said matters are sooner accomplished or otherwise terminated by mutual consent and also so long after said date as may be necessary to complete any unfinished litigation which is in good faith being prosecuted at said expiration date, whether for parties of the first part as plaintiffs or defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
292 P. 953, 211 Cal. 1, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preston-v-herminghaus-cal-1930.